US Think
Tanks Dream Up Russian Collapse, Aggression Despite
the Facts
By Pepe
Escobar
June 23, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Sputnik"
-
It’s like
clockwork. Oil price is on the rise again, as this
column foresaw earlier this year. And the increasing
possibility of Brexit is sending EU decision centers
on a tailspin.
So it's
time for US Think Tankland – as in CIA front
Stratfor, among others – to renew their spin
offensive, mixing “analyses” of imminent Russian
economic collapse with calls for more
NATO pressure over Russia’s western borderlands.
A solid case
can be made that Moscow does not need mountains
of Western investment; credit can be created
in Russia. Most of all, there is rather less
productive investment money in the West than wild
speculative funds; it’s largely a matter of fiat
money and credit, and Moscow does not need to go
to the West for that.
As long
as Russia uses investment capital to increase the
production of goods, this will offset the increase
in money supply. So in the end inflation will be
negligible. Quite a few Russians must be puzzled
at the Central Bank’s
Elvira Nabiullina, with her policy of raising
interest rates to cut back the increase
in investment; that could eventually lead to a
strangled Russia. Not accidently Nabiullina happens
to be extremely praised by US Think Tankland and the
City of London.
As to what
credits would Russia use to pay for needed imported
technology the obvious answer is to draw from energy
exports – especially now with the oil price back
on the way up. And here intervenes the temptation
to redirect the export of oil and natural gas away
from the EU to China and Asia – and let the EU
grapple with its eternally inconsistent “energy
policy”, which consists mainly of blaming
Gazprom.
It’s a myth
that a dearth of foreign investment today will delay
large projects in Russia – including the energy
front; China will step up infrastructure investment
in Russia with many projects linked to the New Silk
Roads and overall Eurasia integration, as even
US Think Tankland admits.
Russia may
also replace most Western imports other
than technology by building their own plants,
following the massively successful Chinese model
that has enabled Beijing, based on purchasing power
parity, to become a larger industrial force than the
US or the EU.
One would
be hard-pressed to find US Think Tankland focusing
on
American economic collapse – as true
unemployment in the US may be as high as 23%.
Inflation is also much higher, as the Bureau
of Labor statistics takes out of the commodity
basket rapidly rising individual commodities or
products and substitutes it for less expensive
replacements. This biases inflation to about half
its actual rise over time. Meanwhile the —
dwindling — “American dream” middle class is being
squeezed, and that largely explains the masses
coming out to cheer Donald Trump.
So we have
reached a geopolitical juncture where the US is
politically being torn apart as the EU is flooded
by a sort of neo-Visigoth invasion. And this may be
just a prelude. EU decision makers are so lost
in space that they cannot control the Fortress’s
borders (and need a dodgy deal with Sultan Erdogan);
but at the same time this does not prevent them
from being led to (cold) war with Russia.
Here is a
good explanation for the contradiction.
Calling Article V on a lone hacker
Back
in Russia, what do Russians want? A
poll from the Levada Center conducted four
months ago still offers excellent insight.
52 percent
of those surveyed prefer a state-controlled economy,
compared to 26 percent who prefer Western
turbo-capitalism and 22 percent who’d rather remain
with the current economic model. Primary concern
among Russians is recession. At the same time,
nearly 75 percent
support the Kremlin offering no concessions
to the Atlanticist axis – assuming that would cause
the easing of sanctions.
Into this
juncture intervenes the
St. Petersburg International Economic Forum ,
forcefully boycotted by official Washington. But
that did not prevent, for instance, a Russian visit
for the head of the European Commission (EC),
Jean-Claude Juncker, who discussed the current
EU-Russia impasse face-to-face with President Putin.
Even though “
sanctions per se were not brought up”, both
parties know a mutually, Asian-style, face-saving
way out must be found away from the current “frozen
relationship."
It’s also a
myth that Moscow eventually “conceding” on Ukraine
and Syria would be seen as conducive to more Western
investment in Russia. These matters are decided
in Washington, not Brussels. What matters for the
Beltway – and that’s bipartisan – is mostly NATO,
not the EU.
What’s
irking the Beltway is that a possible
Brexit would not so much accelerate the
slow-motion disintegration of the EU (it's heading
there anyway) but mostly severe the influence of a
Trojan Horse UK (allied with American interests)
in Brussels. And that would certainly give leeway
to Moscow to exploit the political turmoil and try
to undermine NATO from within.
Whatever
happens post-Brexit, NATO will continue to build
up on Russia's western borderlands – and beyond.
Take the
announcement earlier this week that NATO will
consider a cyber attack reason enough to summon its
Article V – “collective
defense” provision.
NATO decided
on this upgrade after alleging that “Russian
hackers” attacked Hillary Clinton’s subterranean
email server. Well, it was actually
Guccifer 2.0 , a lone hacker; he gave a hoard
of documents to Wikileaks; and the soon to be
published result will be crushing news to NATO’s
official candidate to the US presidential election.
Suppose a
scenario where NATO actually musters the courage
to invoke Article V and attack Russia, which in turn
neutralizes them with its own electronic weapons
arsenal. This would still be re-engineered as
“Russian aggression”. Nothing to see here. US Think
Tankland, the Beltway consensus, NATO’s generals,
they will all continue to believe their own hubris;
“Russian aggression” exists because Russia is
collapsing, so the only solution is to overwhelm
them with our military might. Good luck with that. |